His yell of pain was so loud, it was audible a few miles down.
As the room fell silent, an audible question was heard.
"Jane talks so quietly that it is barely audible."
"Grace spoke in an audible whisper."
"There was an audible sense of dread before the exam."
"The computer will tell you audibly and visually whether you made an error."
The audible sound was
really loud!
Her whisper was barely audible.
She used a microphone to be audible for the crowd. She speaks an audible secret. Which means the secret was hearable
The alarm bell could be heard audibly in the distance.
Mrs. Burdine is very audible.
We used an audiometer in class to compare the difference of my scream to a teacher's whisper and a dog's bark
"The audio setting on the CD player was too high." "The video and audio on the TV program were not synchronized." "There is an audio jack on your computer that you can use for your headphones."
She used a microphone to be audible for the crowd. She speaks an audible secret. Which means the secret was hearable
The music was so loud, it was audible two stories up.
The edible carrot had an audible crunch.
"Turn the radio up, that song is barely audible."
Because the cheering fans in the stadium were so loud, the plays called by the coach were not audible by the quaterback.
Alexis tried to tell me the secret quickly before class, but her whisper was hardly audible.
The alarm bell could be heard audibly in the distance.
Mrs. Burdine is very audible.
I prepared for the sting of the bee with an audible sigh.
Dogs are able to perceive many sounds that are not audible to the human ear. The puppy's quiet whimpering was barely audible above the blaring music. With my new hearing aids, high pitched sounds are audible again. The girl's quiet response was barely audible above the noisy chatter of her classmates.
Are you asking someone to suggest a word that means 'able to be heard'? Perhaps you could rewrite your question as a proper sentence, then you might get an appropriate answer.
We used an audiometer in class to compare the difference of my scream to a teacher's whisper and a dog's bark